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Published byBetty Anastasia Barker Modified over 9 years ago
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American Monopolies
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Economic Definition Sole supplier of a product w/no substitutes – Only Nike shoes, McDonalds food, Saddlebred clothes, Dell computers, Arrowhead bottled water, etc. Company has more market power than anyone else – Can raise prices w/o losing $$$ to rivals – Arrowhead is the only supplier of bottled water they can charge higher prices
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Barriers to Entry (BTE) BTE – restrictions of entry by new firms into an market/industry (1) Legal restrictions – Making entry illegal via patents 1 supplier of hot dogs in a stadium 1 company picking up garbage U.S. Postal Service
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Barriers to Entry (BTE) (2) Economies of scale – business expands, i.e. makes more $$$, as costs go down – 1 firm supplies market @ a lower avg. cost than 2+ firms (natural monopoly) Electrical companies (HSV Utilities) Cable companies (Comcast) – Rural areas 1 grocery store 1 theater 1 restaurant
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Barriers to Entry (BTE) (3) Control of essential resources – Alcoa was only supplier of bauxite Important raw material for aluminum – China is world’s only producer of pandas – De Beers family has dominated the diamond trade since 1930s
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Collusion Agreement b/w 2+ people/companies to limit market competition by deceiving others – An attempt to gain unfair advantage – Divide the market – Set artificial prices – Limit production
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Microsoft (MS)
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Basics 1975 – Founded by Bill Gates & Paul Allen 1980 – Co. introduces its first OS, Xenix 1990 – FTC begins decade- long fight w/MS over collusion
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Microsoft Business Practices 1988-1994 – MS received royalties from computer companies selling computers w/microprocessors – Due to a per processing license, it received $$$ regardless if computer had MS software or not 1995 – Windows 95 released – Included Internet Explorer (IE) web browsing & MS Office
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United States v. Microsoft (2000) U.S. Dept. of Justice & 20 states filed civil actions against MS for violating the Sherman Act MS alleged crimes: – Abused monopoly power on Intel-based computer systems in its sales – Bundled IE w/its Windows operating system
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United States v. Microsoft (2000) Original ruling – MS violated Sections 1 & 2 of Sherman Act – MS is to be divided into 2 companies 1 to produce operating systems 1 to produce software components – MS appealed the ruling Settlement (2001) – MS shares software w/3 rd -party companies – MS still allowed to bundle IE w/Windows
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U.S. Standard Oil
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Basics 1870 – Est. as a corporation in Cleveland, OH Led by John D. Rockefeller Eliminated most competition in Cleveland w/i first 2 months of existence
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Standard Oil Business Practices 1882 – Combined diff. companies spread across diff. states under 9 individual trustees; formed a trust 1890 – Sherman Act passed by Congress – Forbade any contract, scheme, deal, or conspiracy that restricted trade – OH AG files lawsuit against Standard Oil 1897 – Rockefeller retires, remains major stockholder in Standard Oil
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Standard Oil Business Practices 1911 – US DOJ sued Standard Oil, ordered group to break up into 34 companies – Jersey Standard Exxon – Standard Oil Company of New York Mobil – Standard Oil of Ohio Amoco – Standard Oil of California Chevron Exxon & Mobil later merged to form ExxonMobil
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Standard Oil Business Practices Other Trusts… Dumped gasoline into rivers Piled mountains of heavy waste Standard Oil Trust… Fueled its machines Used waste to produce items like Vaseline
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Standard Oil of New Jersey v. United States (1911) Standard Oil undercut a lot of other businesses; later bought them out, particularly gas/service stations – Significantly underpriced same items as competitors – Made threats to suppliers & distributors of competitors US-SC needed to determine if a company buying out others to rid of competition is legal
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Standard Oil of New Jersey v. United States (1911) Original ruling – Standard Oil’s business practices led to a monopoly, thus restricting trade/competition for other businesses – Congress had power through its Commerce Clause to regulate monopolies, and enforce the Sherman Act
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